โJun-28-2021 09:13 AM
โJun-29-2021 08:16 PM
Mike134 wrote:
โJun-29-2021 08:15 PM
agesilaus wrote:
"stationary engineer", heh I was trained as a machinist mate in the USN which is the equivalent and went to Reactor Operator and Engineering Lab Tech before going back to school post Navy. I also worked in a utility with 2200 psi boilers. And boiler water has all sorts of boiler treatment chemicals in it, phosphates, probably some organics like morpholine or cyclohexylamine and so on depending on the unit pressure. Now feedwater is pure until you load it up with chemicals.
Yes you need to be concerned with what but what I would put into a boiler or reactor is not what I would drink...heh. Admiral Rickover picked up a beacker of water of some kind and drank it down, on TV, claiming it was reactor water. LOL what a liar, the barium or Lithium Hydroxide might have produced some gastrointestinal fireworks plus the stuff is mildly radioactive.
โJun-29-2021 08:12 PM
โJun-29-2021 08:10 PM
โJun-29-2021 07:59 PM
agesilaus wrote:swimmer_spe wrote:agesilaus wrote:
Do tell, there is no lab test in Standard Methods for the Examination of Water called "Test for Toxins". Who told you that, the Culigan man?
There are tests for things known to be toxic, but no respectable water person would use toxin.
Water person?! I guess I'm one and if someone wants a test for 'toxins' I would say which one there are thousands or hundreds of thousands probably. You could do a GC/MS (gas chromatography/Mass Spectrography) scan which pick up -organic molecules- in the sample but you are talking serious money per test, over $1000 each for a walk in customer. And you'd have to add a lot of other general chemical and biological analysis to cover the more likely possibilities. But there is no test for toxins the term is nebulous and like a fog bank blowing in the wind. No you go in and buy an analysis for specific compounds 2,4 dichlorobenzene for example.
That's why I asked if it was the Culigan man, those water softener salesmen have a certain reputation amoung environmental chemists and it aligns with RV salesmen. They will do their worst to use the anal extraction method to make up lies to scare people into buying their junk.
But yes we are far off subject. If the OP wants to fill his gut with lake water, that's fine with me. It's his gut after all.
โJun-29-2021 07:56 PM
swimmer_spe wrote:agesilaus wrote:
Do tell, there is no lab test in Standard Methods for the Examination of Water called "Test for Toxins". Who told you that, the Culigan man?
There are tests for things known to be toxic, but no respectable water person would use toxin.
โJun-29-2021 07:45 PM
โJun-29-2021 07:10 PM
agesilaus wrote:
Do tell, there is no lab test in Standard Methods for the Examination of Water called "Test for Toxins". Who told you that, the Culigan man?
โJun-29-2021 02:49 PM
โJun-29-2021 02:46 PM
test your city water while you are at it. Mine has up to 500 toxins in it.
โJun-29-2021 02:21 PM
โJun-29-2021 01:47 PM
Grit dog wrote:mr_andyj wrote:
test your city water while you are at it. Mine has up to 500 toxins in it.
That explains alot...
โJun-29-2021 01:27 PM
valhalla360 wrote:Mike134 wrote:
I remember my first trip to the boundary waters canoe area in Minnesota.
Us city kids were stunned when the outfitter told us to drink the lake water no filter needed.
I must say we had no issues.
Works great...until it doesn't.
โJun-29-2021 12:01 PM
mr_andyj wrote:
test your city water while you are at it. Mine has up to 500 toxins in it.
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys: